Indian Women's League Explained

Indian Women's League
Pixels:200
Country:India
Organiser:All India Football Federation (AIFF)
Teams:7
Levels:1
Relegation:Indian Women's League 2
Confed Cup:AFC Women's Champions League
Champions:Odisha (1st title)
Most Champs:Gokulam Kerala (3 titles)
Tv:Indian Football (YouTube)
Website:the-aiff.com
Current:2024–25

The Indian Women's League (abbreviated as the IWL) is the women's top tier professional football league in India.[1] Founded in 2016, currently a total of 7 teams from across the country participate in the league.[2]

The competition was planned since 2014 and got established in 2016, with the first season starting from October 2016 in Cuttack, Odisha.[3] The league was launched as India's first professional football league for women with the aim to increase the player pool for India national team. Since 2019–20, the clubs that become champions are granted an opportunity to play in the AFC Women's Club Championship, the top tier women's club football competition in Asia.

Until now four clubs have been crowned as champions: Eastern Sporting Union, Rising Students' Club, Sethu and Gokulam Kerala. Out of them Gokulam Kerala has lifted the championship trophy thrice.[4]

History

Origin

Since 1991, the top women's football tournament in India has been the Senior Women's National Football Championship, organised by the All India Football Federation. The tournament served as a female equivalent of the Santosh Trophy, with regional teams competing against each other.[5] There had not been an organized national football league for women clubs; however, the first women's football league was set up by the Indian Football Association (West Bengal) in Kolkata as Calcutta Women's Football League in 1993. Regional leagues were also organised in Mumbai and Goa in 1998 and 1999 respectively by the respective state associations.[6] But unfortunately due to lack of support, these amateur leagues were postponed for a long period or completely dissolved after a short run.

Foundation

In 2014, after the success of the India women's team, mainly in the SAFF Women's Championship, a push to start a women's football league, along the lines of recently inaugurated and successful Indian Super League, happened.[7] Clubs such as Pune and Bengaluru expressed interests in joining a national women's league.[7] It was around this time that AIFF started plans to create a league for women along the lines of ISL.[8]

On 21 April 2016, the AIFF president Praful Patel said that Indian Women's League would kick-off in October with six teams to be decided, and goal to expand to eight teams by 2017.[3] Over two months later, on 5 July, AIFF organized a workshop to discuss the India women's national team and proposed women's football league. Five Indian Super League sides – Delhi Dynamos, Chennaiyin, Kerala Blasters, Pune City and Atletico de Kolkata, and three I-League sides – Bengaluru, Aizawl and Mumbai, attended the workshop. It was announced that the league would feature eight teams and two other spots would be determined through a preliminary round.[9] The primary objective of the tournament was to capitalise the potential of Indian women and prepare them for the national team, so as to eventually qualify for AFC Women's Asian Cup and FIFA Women's World Cup.[10]

The preliminary round of the inaugural season was played from 17–26 October in Cuttack by 8 teams qualifying through a national qualifier of 20 teams across the country, and the main round of six teams took place the following year from 28 January to 14 February in New Delhi.[11] The six teams to participate in the main round were Aizawl, Alakhpura, Eastern Sporting Union, Jeppiaar Institute, Pune City and Rising Students' Club, and top four teams are decided to play the semi-finals after a single round-robin stage. Aizawl and Pune City were the only clubs from both the I-League and the ISL to field their women teams in the competition and had achieved direct qualification in main round. Eastern Sporting Union defeated Rising Students' Club by 3–0 in the final and became the inaugural champion of IWL.[12]

Expansion and improvements (2017–present)

The following season the AIFF extended their partnership with Hero MotoCorp and rebranded the league as the Hero IWL. The organisers also allowed the signing of foreign players in the main round but restricted to only two foreigners in matchday squad, while only one could be named in the starting eleven.[13] This season no other ISL or I-League club except Gokulam Kerala participated in the competition, therefore six teams were promoted from the preliminary round to the main round. Gokulam Kerala became the first Indian club to sign a foreigner, as they included two Ugandan internationals – Fazila Ikwaput and Rita Nabbosa.[13] [14] The only other club to sign foreigners was Sethu: Bangladeshi internationals Sabina Khatun and Krishna Rani Sarkar, and British midfielder Tanvie Hans.[15] [16] The preliminary round was played at Kolhapur from 25 November to 8 December 2017 among thirteen teams, and the main round was held from 26 March to 14 April 2018 in Shillong.[17] Last season's finalists met once again in the finals, but Rising Students' Club beat Eastern Sporting Union this time in the penalties to win the league.[18] From 2018–19 season, the qualification of teams was decided based on the results in respective state leagues, and the number of teams was also doubled to twelve. The format was also changed, and teams were divided into two groups to decide the top two from each group playing in the semi-finals. The season culminated with Sethu becoming the champion of IWL. Since 2019, AFC and FIFA jointly organised AFC Women's Club Championship, and India decided to participate in the second edition of the competition to be held in 2021 AFC Women's Club Championship.[19] Therefore, the winner of the 2019–20 season was decided to be the probable representative of India in the continental tournament.[20] At the final of the tournament, Gokulam Kerala became the champion of the season after remaining unbeaten throughout the tournament, thus became the first club to win the top-tier league of both men's and women's, and also the first Indian team to play in AFC Women's Club Championship.[20] In 2021–22, the AIFF changed the format to a single round-robin tournament and the team that would remain at the top of the table at the end, would be declared as the champions. Gokulam Kerala became the first club to defend their league title by finishing the season unbeaten, hence qualifying for the continental tournament for the second time in a row. In 2022–23, the league got expanded to 16 teams, with the top 8 of previous season to be eligible for direct qualification to the next season, irrespective of their results in the state leagues.[21]

Format

The competition format had varied over the initial seasons, but mostly played as a knock-out tournament where four teams qualified for the single-legged semi-finals through the group stage played in single round-robin format and eventually one would be declared as the champion by winning the final. Currently, the competition follows single round-robin league format of 12 rounds played at a single venue.[22] The winners of respective state leagues, along with previous season's top four teams, receive direct qualification to the league.[22] The interested clubs from the regions without any state tournament are to register for the IWL Qualifiers and earn a spot in the main round by winning the qualifier.[22]

Clubs

Current clubs

See also: 2023–24 Indian Women's League.

ClubCityState/RegionStadiumCapacity
East BengalKolkataWest BengalEast Bengal Ground23,500
Gokulam KeralaKozhikodeKeralaEMS Corporation Stadium50,000
HOPSNew DelhiDelhiAmbedkar Stadium15,000
KickstartBengaluruKarnatakaBangalore Football Stadium8,400
NitaBhubaneswarOdishaKalinga Stadium15,000
OdishaBhubaneswarOdishaKalinga Stadium15,000
SethuMaduraiTamil NaduTilak Maidan5,000
Sports OdishaBhubaneswarOdishaCapital Football Arena1,500
SreebhumiKolkataWest BengalAmal Dutta Krirangan6,000

All time clubs to play in main round of IWL

! Club !! Location !! No. of
seasons! Last
!! Best finish
Aizawl WomenAizawl, Mizoram12016–17 (6th in group)6th in group (2016–17)
AlakhpuraBawani Khera, Haryana22018–19 (6th in group)Semi-finalist (2016–17)
ARAAhmedabad, Gujarat12021–22 (8th)8th (2021–22)
Bangalore UnitedBangalore, Karnataka22019–20 (5th in group)5th in group (2018–19,
2019–20)
BBK DAVAmritsar, Punjab12019–20 (6th in group)6th in group (2019–20)
Baroda Football AcademyVadodara, Gujarat22019–20 (5th in group)5th in group (2019–20)
Bidesh XIAssonora, Goa12019–20 (6th in group)6th in group (2019–20)
Celtic QueensPuducherry12022–23 (6th in group)6th in group (2022–23)
CRPFJalandhar, Punjab12022–23 (5th in group)5th in group (2022–23)
Churchill BrothersVasco da Gama, Goa12022–23 (8th in group)8th in group (2022–23)
East BengalKolkata, West Bengal22023–24 (6th)Quarter-finalist (2022–23)
Eastern Sporting UnionImphal, Manipur32022–23 (Semi-finalist)Champion (2016–17)
Gokulam KeralaKozhikode, Kerala62023–24 (2nd)Champion (2019–20, 2021–22, 2022–23)
Hans Women FCNew Delhi, Delhi22021–22 (12th)3rd in group (2018–19)
HOPSNew Delhi, Delhi22023–24 (5th)Quarter-finalist (2022–23)
Indian ArrowsBhubaneswar, Odisha12021–22 (5th)5th (2021–22)
Indira Gandhi AS&EPuducherry12017–18 (6th in group)6th in group (2017–18)
Jeppiaar InstitutePuducherry12016–17 (5th in group)5th in group (2016–17)
Kahaani FCAhmedabad, Gujarat12022–23 (8th in group)8th in group (2022–23)
Kenkre WomenMumbai, Maharashtra12019–20 (Semi-finalist)Semi-finalist (2019–20)
KickstartBangalore, Karnataka42023–24 (3rd)Runner-up (2022–23)
Kolhapur CityKolhapur, Maharashtra22019–20 (4th in group)3rd in group (2018–19)
KRYPHSAImphal, Manipur22019–20 (Runner-up)Runner-up (2019–20)
Lords FAKochi, Kerala12022–23 (7th in group)7th in group (2022–23)
Manipur PoliceImphal, Manipur12018–19 (Runner-up)Runner-up(2018–19)
Mata Rukmani SCBastar, Chhattisgarh22022–23 (7th in group)11th (2021–22)
Misaka United FCBengaluru, Karnataka12022–23 (5th in group)5th in group (2022–23)
Mumbai KnightsMumbai, Maharashtra12022–23 (6th in group)6th in group (2022–23)
OdishaBhubaneswar, Odisha22023–24 (Champion)Champion (2023–24)
Odisha PoliceBhubaneswar, Odisha22021–22 (10th)3rd in group (2019–20)
Panjim FootballersPanaji, Goa12018–19 (4th in group)4th in group (2018–19)
PIFA Sports ColabaMumbai, Maharashtra12021–22 (7th)7th (2021–22)
Pune CityPune, Maharashtra12016–17 (4th in group)4th in group (2016–17)
Rising Students' ClubCuttack, Odisha32018–19 (5th in group)Champion (2017–18)
Rush SoccerMumbai, Maharashtra12017–18 (7th in group)7th in group (2017–18)
SAI-STC CuttackCuttack, Odisha12018–19 (4th in group)4th in group (2018–19)
SSBSiliguri, West Bengal22021–22 (6th)Semi-finalist (2018–19)
SethuMadurai, Tamil Nadu62023–24 (4th)Champion (2018–19)
SirvodemNavelim, Goa12021–22 (9th)9th (2021–22)
Sports OdishaBhubaneswar, Odisha32023–24 (7th)4th (2021–22)
SreebhumiKolkata, West Bengal12019–20 (4th in group)4th in group (2019–20)

Media coverage

The first four seasons of the league lacked TV broadcasting, and matches were live streamed on the YouTube channel and the Facebook page of Indian Football.[23] Live updates of matches were also available on the Twitter profile of Indian Football. In 2022, the AIFF reached a deal with Eurosport India to telecast the fifth edition of IWL, but only 30 matches out of total 66 matches were telecast.[24] [25] For the 2023-24 season, the IWL is broadcast on Indian Football YouTube channel.

Champions

See also: List of Indian women's football champions.

Performance by season

SeasonChampionsRunners-upTeams
2016–17Eastern Sporting UnionRising Students Club6
Rising Students ClubEastern Sporting Union7
2018–19SethuManipur Police12
2019–20Gokulam KeralaKRYPHSA12
2020–21Cancelled due to Covid-19 pandemic
2021–22Gokulam KeralaSethu12
2022–23Gokulam KeralaKickstart16
2023–24OdishaGokulam Kerala7

Performance by club

ClubChampionRunner-upWinning seasonRunner-up season
Gokulam Kerala312019–20, 2021–22, 2022–232023–24
Eastern Sporting Union112016–172017–18
Rising Students Club112017–182016–17
Sethu112018–192021–22
Odisha12023–24
Manipur Police12018–19
KRYPHSA12019–20
Kickstart12022–23

Winning head coaches

Head coachClubWinsWinning season
Oinam Bembem DeviEastern Sporting Union12016–17
Sukla DuttaRising Students12017−18
Amrutha AravindSethu12018−19
Priya P. V.Gokulam Kerala12019–20
Anthony AndrewsGokulam Kerala22021–22, 2022–23
Crispin ChettriOdisha12023–24

Records

Top goal scorers

See also: List of Indian Women's League hat-tricks.

RankPlayerSeasonsGoals
1 369
2 Bala Devi448
3 Nongmaithem Ratanbala Devi425
4
5 Yumnam Kamala Devi322
6 Win Theingi Tun118
7415
Anju Tamang4
8 Karishma Shirvoikar211
10310
Irom Prameshwori Devi4
Kashmina Devi3
1238
14 Sasmita Malik17
3
Soumya Guguloth1
1716
Jabamani Tudu3
19 Fazila Ikwaput15
Heigrujam Daya Devi1
3
Pradeepa Sekar3
2

Top scorers by season

SeasonPlayerClubGoals
2016−17Eastern Sporting Union12
2017−18KRYPHSA12
2018−19Manipur Police26
2019–20Gokulam Kerala16
2021–22 Elshaddai AcheampongGokulam Kerala20
2022–23Gokulam Kerala29
2023–24Gokulam Kerala13

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: IWL: Tough battle awaits for debutants Churchill Brothers . timesofindia.indiatimes.com . . TNN . Goa . 24 April 2023 . 24 April 2023 . 24 April 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230424053654/https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/iwl-tough-battle-awaits-debutants-churchill-bros/articleshow/99714198.cms . live .
  2. Web site: 25 April 2023. New clubs and new goals are at the forefront of the Hero IWL. FootballExpress.in.
  3. News: Puri. Rohan. Women's football league from October. 22 April 2016. Times of India. 21 April 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160926070630/http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/football/top-stories/Womens-football-league-from-October/articleshow/51922352.cms. 26 September 2016. live.
  4. News: Indian Women's League 2023: Gokulam Kerala thrash Kickstart FC 5–0 to win third consecutive title. sportstar.thehindu.com. Sportstar. 21 May 2023. 22 May 2023. Chennai. https://web.archive.org/web/20230522151217/https://sportstar.thehindu.com/football/gokulam-kerala-wins-indian-womens-league-gkfc-5-0-kickstart-fc-sabitra-bhandari-top-scorer-iwl-records-milestones-stats/article66878249.ece. 22 May 2023.
  5. Web site: India – List of Women's Champions. RSSSF. 22 April 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20100205054139/http://rsssf.com/tablesi/india-womchamp.html. 5 February 2010. live.
  6. Web site: Indian Football: This One Is For The Ladies . Sachin Madaan . 2011-07-23 . 13 November 2012.
  7. News: Das. Suprita. Now A Women's Football League?. 22 April 2016. NDTV Sports. 26 January 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160513032146/http://sports.ndtv.com/football/news/236595-now-a-women-s-football-league. 13 May 2016. live.
  8. News: AIFF Plans to Start Indian Super League-Style Women's Football. 22 April 2016. NDTV Sports. 17 December 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304031420/http://sports.ndtv.com/football/news/234678-aiff-plans-to-start-indian-super-league-style-women-s-football. 4 March 2016. live.
  9. News: AIFF conducts workshop for National Women's League. 6 July 2016. Times of India. 5 July 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160709050934/http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/AIFF-conducts-workshop-for-National-Womens-League/articleshow/53062408.cms. 9 July 2016. live.
  10. News: INDIAN WOMEN'S LEAGUE PRELIMS TO KICK-OFF ON OCT 17. 14 October 2016. The All India Football Federation. 14 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161019020831/https://www.the-aiff.com/news-center-details.htm?id=7522. 19 October 2016. live.
  11. News: AIFF launches professional league for women footballers. 25 January 2017. Outlook India. 24 January 2017.
  12. Web site: EASTERN SPORTING UNION CROWNED CHAMPIONS OF INDIAN WOMEN'S LEAGUE . The AIFF . 3 May 2022.
  13. News: Sudevan . Praveen . Gokulam Kerala look to accomplish mission impossible in their Indian Women's League debut . 3 May 2022 . Scroll . 26 March 2018.
  14. News: Tennyson . Rayson P . Gokulam rope in two Uganda footballers for Women's League . 3 May 2022 . The Times of India . 19 March 2018.
  15. Web site: Krishna, Sabina to fly for India today. 25 March 2018. thedailystar.net.
  16. Web site: Rohit Paniker. 21 May 2019. Tanvie Hans slowly and steadily reaching her football dream. India Today. en. 6 December 2021. 6 December 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211206145706/https://www.indiatoday.in/sports/football/story/tanvie-hans-indian-women-s-league-bangalore-united-1531128-2019-05-21. live.
  17. Web site: INDIAN WOMEN'S LEAGUE TO KICK-OFF ON MARCH 25. Aiff.com. 6 March 2018. 6 March 2018.
  18. Web site: Solomon . Joseph . RISING STUDENT CLUB CROWNED CHAMPIONS OF HERO IWL . The AIFF . 3 May 2022.
  19. Web site: Joseph . Martin . AIFF keen to host women's league by September in light of continental invite . The Indian Express . 3 May 2022.
  20. Web site: 2021-07-15. Gokulam Kerala FC to represent India in AFC Women's Club Championship. 2021-07-16. The Indian Express. en.
  21. News: November 9, 2022 . Direct entry for top four teams in IWL, league to be played at three venues . 2022-11-09 . The Times of India . en.
  22. News: Indian Women's League (IWL) 2021-22 will kick off in Bhubaneswar on April 15 2022 with 12 teams . 4 May 2022 . The Away End . 25 March 2022.
  23. News: Thomas . Nevin . Indian Women's League: A new dawn . 4 May 2022 . Sportstar . The Hindu . 1 February 2017.
  24. News: Indian Women's League to kickstart on April 15 on Eurosport India . The Times of India . 13 April 2022.
  25. News: Eurosport India to broadcast Hero Indian Women's League 2021-22 . 4 May 2022 . Best Media Info . 13 April 2022.